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Dracula (1931)

February 12, 1931 (US) Horror • 74m

Overview

A British estate agent travels to Transylvania to meet the mysterious Count Dracula, who is interested in leasing a London castle. After Dracula enslaves the agent and drives him to insanity, the pair return to London together, where Dracula, a secret bloodsucker, begins preying on socialites.

Keywords

Top Billed Cast

Bela Lugosi
Bela Lugosi

Count Dracula

Herbert Bunston
Herbert Bunston

Doctor Seward

Anna Bakacs
Anna Bakacs

Innkeeper's Daughter (uncredited)

Bunny Beatty
Bunny Beatty

Flower Girl (uncredited)

Nicholas Bela
Nicholas Bela

Coach Passenger (uncredited)

Daisy Belmore
Daisy Belmore

Coach Passenger (uncredited)

William A. Boardway
William A. Boardway

Concertgoer Outside Theatre (uncredited)

Barbara Bozoky
Barbara Bozoky

Innkeeper's Wife (uncredited)

Tod Browning
Tod Browning

Harbormaster (voice) (uncredited)

Moon Carroll
Moon Carroll

Maid (uncredited)

Geraldine Dvorak
Geraldine Dvorak

Dracula's Bride (uncredited)

John George
John George

Small Scientist (uncredited)

Anita Harder
Anita Harder

Bit (uncredited)

Carla Laemmle
Carla Laemmle

Coach Passenger (uncredited)

Wyndham Standing
Wyndham Standing

Surgeon (uncredited)

Cornelia Thaw
Cornelia Thaw

Dracula's Bride (uncredited)

Dorothy Tree
Dorothy Tree

Dracula's Bride (uncredited)

Josephine Velez
Josephine Velez

Grace, English Nurse (uncredited)

Michael Visaroff
Michael Visaroff

Innkeeper (uncredited)

Florence Wix
Florence Wix

Concertgoer Outside Theater (uncredited)

Crew
Karl Freund
Karl Freund

Director of Photography

Charles D. Hall
Charles D. Hall

Art Direction

Maurice Pivar
Maurice Pivar

Supervising Film Editor

C. Roy Hunter
C. Roy Hunter

Recording Supervision

Charles Logue
Charles Logue

Script Supervisor

Heinz Roemheld
Heinz Roemheld

Music Supervisor

Joseph Brotherton
Joseph Brotherton

Second Unit Director of Photography

E.M. Asher
E.M. Asher

Associate Producer

Jack Pierce
Jack Pierce

Makeup Artist

Karl Freund
Karl Freund

Co-Director

Jack Foley
Jack Foley

Foley Artist

Ed Ware
Ed Ware

Costume Design

Jack Bolger
Jack Bolger

Boom Operator

William Davidson
William Davidson

Production Illustrator

Dudley Murphy
Dudley Murphy

Additional Dialogue

Max Cohen
Max Cohen

Title Designer

Herman Rosse
Herman Rosse

Set Designer

Frank H. Booth
Frank H. Booth

Effects Supervisor

Nan Grant
Nan Grant

Researcher

Frank H. Booth
Frank H. Booth

Second Assistant Camera

Aileen Webster
Aileen Webster

Script Supervisor

Vera West
Vera West

Costume Design

John P. Fulton
John P. Fulton

Matte Painter

Herman Rosse
Herman Rosse

Production Design

Scott R. Beal
Scott R. Beal

First Assistant Director

King D. Gray
King D. Gray

First Assistant Camera

Herman Schlom
Herman Schlom

Second Assistant Director

John Hoffman
John Hoffman

Production Design

John Hoffman
John Hoffman

Set Designer

Roman Freulich
Roman Freulich

Still Photographer



Reviews

talisencrw

⭐ 9/10

September 28, 2016

Though not my very favourite movie about the infamous vampire, this is quite beautiful, well-told and gorgeously photographed (I really can't wait to see the blu!) and is most probably Bela Lugosi's finest hour (though I love his work; and it's also right up there with the greatest-ever vampiric depictions on celluloid), and it has genuine scares. Lugosi not only growls and snarls but also delivers the succulent seductive power of both evil itsel… read the rest.

JPV852

⭐ 8/10

October 7, 2021

Probably my third or fourth time seeing this and while the story is simple, still really entertaining and Bela Lugosi, who even as a favorite of mine acknowledge was never the strongest actor, is in his element. Also has some decent effects and nice set design for the era. **4.0/5**

Martha

⭐ 10/10

July 26, 2022

"The blood is the life, Mr. REINFIELD"



At three years old this was my first horror movie. My great-grandmother is the one who sat me down and showed me great Bela Lugosi as Dracula. This entire movie is timeless and classic. The very best of all the Universal horrors.

No one could be a more perfect Dracula than Bela Lugosi. To accomplish so much with just a stare. No special effects. No fangs... yet he chilled you to the bone and enthra… read the rest.

Wuchak

⭐ 6/10

May 27, 2023

**_A tall, dark and mesmerizing vampire comes to London from Transylvania_**

“Dracula” (1931) was based on the play rather than the novel, but the basic Bram Stoker tale is there with alterations. In its time, this was great. Talkies had only been around for a handful of years. Don’t expect the nudity, violence or gore of Coppola’s “Bram Stoker’s Dracula” (1992). If you want a modern take on the tale, I suggest that one (which adds a well-done… read the rest.

CinemaSerf

⭐ 7/10

October 8, 2023

I saw this with a marvellous piano accompaniment that really did showcase the delights of silent cinema and the talents of a pianist who can play, non-stop, for seventy five minutes. Though Bela Lugosi takes top billing as the eponymous character, I felt the film really belonged to his assistant "Renfield" - enjoyably portrayed here by Dwight Frye. He is just an innocent estate agent who arrives at Castle Dracula only to find himself quickly enth… read the rest.

Status

Released

Original Language

EN

Budget

$355,000

Revenue

$700,000

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